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Trump Promises Revenge on Companies He Doesn’t Like

Mother Jones

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This popped up in my Twitter feed this morning:

This is totally true. Yesterday I noted that Bernie Sanders had urged Trump to deny federal contracts to companies that move jobs overseas, calling it a massive abuse of power. I got some pushback on that, along the lines of “Why shouldn’t a president stand up for American workers?”

Well, a president should. But a president shouldn’t personally punish companies that do things he doesn’t like. I hope that requires no explanation. Now, if Congress passes a law banning federal contracts for companies that engage in some specified form of job offshoring, that would be different. It would almost certainly be a very bad law, but I’m pretty sure it would be constitutional. And if it allowed the executive branch a certain amount of discretion in enforcing the law, then Trump could take advantage of that.

I would not recommend doing this. But it would be legal. Until then, however, it wouldn’t be. And it would be wrong. Let’s not encourage Trump to think of himself as any more of a mafia kingpin than he already does.

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Trump Promises Revenge on Companies He Doesn’t Like

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Gay Men Wanted to Donate Blood in Orlando. They’re Still Not Allowed To.

Mother Jones

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By the early afternoon on June 12, hours after a gunman slaughtered 49 people at a gay nightclub in Orlando, hundreds of sympathizers had lined up to donate blood to the 53 young men and women who had survived the shooting. There were many gay men who would have liked to help but couldn’t. Last December, the Food and Drug Administration lifted its lifetime ban on blood donations by men who have sex with men (often referred to as MSM). Gay men could now give blood, the agency announced—but only if they’ve been celibate for a year beforehand. For gay men in America, it is still easier to purchase an assault rifle than to donate blood.

The lifetime ban was implemented during the early 1980s to help stem the spread of AIDS, which doctors had no way to diagnose or treat at the time. Three decades later, HIV/AIDS is a chronic condition, and advances in diagnostics have made it possible to detect infection within as few as nine days of exposure. But medical progress and political progress are asymmetrical. Despite years of criticism from the American Association of Blood Banks, the New York City Council, and the American Medical Association (AMA), the prohibition remained in place. “The lifetime ban on blood donation for men who have sex with men is discriminatory and not based on sound science,” the AMA declared in 2013.

So the FDA finally relented, somewhat, by reducing the lifetime ban to a yearlong moratorium on donations after the last male-to-male sexual encounter. “The 12-month deferral window is supported by the best available scientific evidence,” Dr. Peter Marks, head of the FDA branch that crafted the recommendation, said in a statement announcing the new policy.

Dan Bruner, the senior director of policy at Washington, DC’s premier HIV clinic, Whitman-Walker Health, was disappointed. “The updated policy is still discriminatory and not rooted in the reality of HIV testing today,” he wrote in response. “The deferral period should be no longer than 30 days.”

In the aftermath of Orlando, as a flurry of politicians, mourners, and activists have renewed their call for the FDA to rethink its 12-month policy, old arguments about public health and identity politics have re-emerged. Once again, health authorities, doctors, and LGBTQ advocates are looking at the same studies and clinical data and coming away with opposing conclusions on what constitutes the “best” scientific evidence.

There’s an emotional history here. By the time the FDA released the first reliable HIV test in 1985, more than 14,000 surgery patients and hemophiliacs were known to have been infected by blood transfusions—a veritable death sentence. Thousands of the fatal donations came from closeted gay men. Even with a test available, infected blood still snuck into the blood supply, because there is a window during which the virus is undetectable in the bloodstream of an infected person. The most common HIV test looks for antibodies against the virus rather than the virus itself. Just as there’s a lag between the intrusion of a burglar and the arrival of police, there’s a lag between pathogen and antibody. In the 1980s, the lag period was around a month. Today, every unit of blood collected in America must pass a nucleic acid test, which can detect HIV nine days after a person is infected.

Bruner, who is gay, is frustrated by the disparity between the FDA’s new policy and modern HIV diagnostics. “I’m married and have been in a monogamous relationship for 33 years,” he says. “If the Red Cross had a blood drive and I wanted to give, I could hold off on sex for a month. I could understand that. But the one-year ban is illusory progress. It says, ‘You can’t donate if you have a sex life.'” Bruner compares the current situation to the exclusion of homosexuals from the military for the sake of troop cohesion. “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” a policy enacted in 1994 under President Bill Clinton and eliminated in 2011, allowed homosexuals to serve only if they remained in the closet, putting gay sex at odds with civic duty. “Donating blood is something normal people do,” Bruner says. “The FDA’s policy treats MSM as if they’re not normal, as if they have an infection even when they don’t.”

Indeed, the FDA does not consider MSM normal when it comes to HIV. “A history of male-to-male sexual contact was associated with a 62-fold increased risk for being HIV positive,” Marks tells me. He adds that MSM comprise 2 percent of the population but account for two-thirds of new HIV infections. “If everyone was 100 percent truthful and never cheated, the current nucleic acid test would be able to take care of things,” he explains. “Say you and your partner always use condoms. That also has a failure rate. With anal receptive intercourse it’s 1 to 2 percent.” That adds up fast when your agency is responsible for the safety of millions of Americans.

The FDA relies on data to craft policy, and because American researchers have not thoroughly studied a shorter deferral period for MSM, the agency instead looked to Australia, whose HIV epidemiology and blood screening systems are similar to those in the United States, according to Marks. In 2000, Australia replaced its own indefinite ban on MSM blood donations with a 12-month deferral for sexually active gay men. Australian researchers then studied millions of blood donors from the mid-1990s to the mid-2000s and found no statistically significant increase in the number of HIV-positive donors under the new policy, much less transfusion-borne infections.

Health officials in Italy tried something different: They eliminated MSM deferrals entirely in 2001 and began assessing each donor’s risk with an extensive questionnaire. In 2013, Italian researchers concluded that this individual risk assessment was just as effective at screening out HIV-positive donors (regardless of sexuality) as their nation’s mandatory MSM deferral had been.

Preempting questions about these findings on C-SPAN, Marks said that heterosexuals account for a much larger proportion of new HIV infections in Italy than in the United States. He claimed that getting rid of deferrals and relying only on HIV testing would quadruple the rate of infection through the blood supply. In a subsequent interview, he also said it “wasn’t too big a leap” to make policy based on a six-year-old study of another country’s policy. “We want data we can hang our hat on,” he said.

Public health, of course, is not clinical medicine in aggregate. Doctors treat individuals and can see the result of a prescription in days, but public health officials deal in million-person trends and decade-long studies. It’s therefore not surprising that the FDA’s blood-donation policy lags a decade behind modern diagnostics. “For every letter we got saying we should advance the policy, we got one saying that we shouldn’t change the policy,” Marks says. Imagine the response had the FDA tried to end its MSM ban six years ago, when Australian researchers first published their study. In 2010, a majority of Americans opposed same-sex marriage, including President Barack Obama (publicly, at least). Today, we are more sympathetic to LGBTQ people, but the association of AIDS with gay men endures, in part because the latter still account for a staggering proportion of the US HIV-positive population—more than 40 percent as of 2011.

Dr. Gerald Friedland, an AIDS expert at Yale New Haven Hospital, can sympathize with both sides. “There is logic to the current policy because MSM are the highest-risk population, but there is a danger of stigmatizing,” he says. “Every epidemic is a mosaic of smaller epidemics. Risk is contextual.” For instance, African Americans make up 41 percent of the 1.2 million HIV-positive Americans despite being only 12 percent of the population. In 2014, roughly a quarter of the nation’s 45,000 new HIV infections were black MSM. Poverty, access to housing and education, and geography matter, too. The South is home to 37 percent of the population but 44 percent of Americans with HIV. Yet there are no special donor questions or deferrals for black people, poor people, or Southerners.

Friedland says the FDA may have crafted its policy in deference to the hierarchy of medical evidence. “When we make guidelines for antiretroviral therapy, for example,” he says, “a strong recommendation will receive an ‘A’ if it’s based on two double-blind randomized control trials”—experiments in which neither the researchers nor the subjects know who receives the medication and who receives a placebo. A recommendation receives a “B” if it relies on observational studies, which Friedland describes as “lots of evidence but not randomized evidence.” (The studies from Australia and Italy would probably receive a “B.”) The third threshold, a “C,” is based on a consensus of expert opinion in situations where there are no good studies. (The idea of shrinking the MSM deferral to 30 days would get a “C” because it hasn’t been studied.) “Many decisions are made on this basis,” Friedland says. “There might have been a difference of opinion within the FDA that led to a less-than-forceful recommendation.” The apparent unwillingness of the medical community to undertake clinically relevant studies of a 30-day deferral for sexually active gay men—research many experts say could be conducted without endangering any transfusion recipients—leaves in place a somewhat arbitrary policy that feels discriminatory to many Americans.

Earlier this spring, I went to a Red Cross blood drive in New Haven, Connecticut, and found that the nonprofit had yet to implement the FDA’s “less-than-forceful” recommendations. Its laminated donor handouts still told gay men they could not donate blood, period. Dr. Dominick Giovanniello, the American Red Cross’ medical director for Connecticut, explains that the policy change is more gradual and complicated than media reports made it seem back in December. The new policy, Giovanniello says, was issued as a “draft guidance” back in May of 2015, which gave blood banks time to absorb the changes and get donation centers up to speed, rewriting and reprinting donor manuals, creating new programming for computer-based questionnaires, and retraining phlebotomy staff.

The American Red Cross, a private entity regulated by the FDA, is responsible for about 40 percent of the nation’s blood supply, more than 5 million pints every year, and it wants its policies and facilities to be “in sync” nationwide before it rolls out the changes. Donation facilities less strict than the FDA recommends can be cited or even shut down, so they err on the side of strictness. Yet more than a year has passed since the FDA issued the draft guidance, and the American Red Cross has yet to end the indefinite deferrals. “I’m a little surprised that it’s taken blood banks this much time,” Marks told me.

The ongoing deferral puzzles many LGBTQ advocates, given how vital blood is to the health care system. The Williams Institute, a think tank affiliated with the UCLA School of Law, found that the 12-month deferral forfeits as many as 300,000 pints of blood every year. Ending it, the institute wrote, could “help save the lives of more than a million people.”

Then again, the nation’s demand for blood is down significantly, falling by 27 percent from 2008 to 2013, due to the emergence of minimally invasive surgery and evidence that high-volume blood transfusion is risky and expensive. But the complex biology of blood means that even a slight expansion of the donor pool could save many lives. Although more than two-thirds of Americans have A-positive or O-positive blood, around 9 percent have O-negative and 3 percent have AB-positive, and these rarer types are highly versatile: You can transfuse any patient with O-negative blood cells, and AB plasma is accepted by any body. “There’s always a need for AB plasma and O-negative red blood cells,” Giovanniello says. Having these rare types on hand is especially important when time is short—say, in the aftermath of a mass shooting.

When I ask Marks about the Orlando attack and whether the FDA plans to respond to the renewed criticism of the 12-month deferral, he replies that the agency is “on a course to gather more data to move the policy forward” and that a new plan has “been in the works for weeks and weeks.” He and his staff would only hint about what such a plan might entail. Lorrie McNeill, Marks’ communications director, tells me that many in the LGBTQ community feel that any time-based deferral would be discriminatory. “The comments we heard back were overwhelmingly in favor of moving toward an individual risk assessment,” McNeil says.

Marks has previously said that the FDA hopes to better understand why HIV-positive people would donate blood, which requires thinking about how and why people lie when answering donor questionnaires. “Most donors answer questions as if they’re asking ‘Is my blood safe?’ rather than what they actually ask,” he tells me. “If people feel like we have a fair policy, then they’ll be more likely to comply. There are certain questions that make people so embarrassed that they won’t answer truthfully.”

Marks is cagey about what an improved donor questionnaire might include. “If I could ask you your favorite kind of ice cream bar, and that would predict with 99.9 percent accuracy that you were safe to donate,” he says, “then that would work.” In any case, an FDA study on the effectiveness of a less invasive, more holistic donor history questionnaire would show that the agency is seeking evidence that could support an effective individual risk assessment.

But even if the FDA takes this step, the research would take years to complete, could be cut short by a Republican administration, and might deliver inconclusive results. In the meantime, queer men who want to give blood have to re-enter the closet for an afternoon. The FDA has thought through its policies with care, but its circumspection is lost on millions of gay men and their allies who view the deferral as a symptom of the same phobia that apparently brought a man with an assault rifle to a gay club. The current policy suggests that the federal government is more concerned with preventing injury than insult. With better evidence, it won’t have to choose one or the other.

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Gay Men Wanted to Donate Blood in Orlando. They’re Still Not Allowed To.

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The One Line in New Hampshire That Donald Trump Won’t Cross

Mother Jones

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It’s hard to get too lost on your way to Pittsburg, New Hampshire (pop. 869). You just drive north for a while. And then you keep driving north for a while longer. Pittsburg is New Hampshire’s largest town by land area, covering nearly 300 square miles of North Country mountains and lakes and spanning the entire length of the state’s international border with Canada. It’s also one of the only corners of the nation’s first primary state where candidates never go.

In a year in which Republican candidates have made the Rio Grande a mandatory stop on the presidential campaign trail, trekking to McAllen, Texas, to stare grimly into the Mexican desert, the far vaster northern border—the one terrorists have actually tried to come across—is a much different story. Of the hundreds upon hundreds of town halls and meet-and-greets in the 2016 election cycle, only one happened in Pittsburg. And it was held by Lindsey Graham.

(It’s not just candidates who have a tendency to overlook Pittsburg; in the 1830s, it was excised from the United States by a vaguely written treaty, and it hummed along for three years as the independent republic of Indian Stream before the boundary was clarified.)

“People certainly can sneak through here, there’s no doubt about it,” said Laurie Urekew, braving the snow flurries on Saturday afternoon outside Young’s general store, an all-purpose grocery and gas station that features a punching bag of President Barack Obama by the register. “But it’s very vast here, so chances are someone from the southern area wouldn’t survive too much.”

Tim Murphy / Mother Jones

Urekew is a Republican (“the only good Democrat is a dead one,” she joked), who was torn between Donald Trump and Ted Cruz, provided the latter is ruled eligible. “I like Trump because we need somebody like him—he’s strong and yet he’s not afraid to be politically incorrect,” she said. But she trusts Cruz more than Trump to shut down the border—the southern one.

Although Trump is popular in the North Country, his warnings about a Canadian senator usurping the American government has hit with a thud—it’s just not that big of an issue. Canadian flags fly with American ones outside some houses, road signs are in French and English, and there’s a Quebecois radio station. The compelling local issue up north is not the border; it’s the proposed Northern Pass transmission line, which would cut through the North Country to bring hydroelectric power from Canada to the Northeast, but would require the use of eminent domain to acquire land for the project. For that reason, it’s deeply unpopular in northern New Hampshire. (The slogan that Northern Pass opponents have come up with is “Live Free or Fry,” which you have to admit, is pretty good.) Trump was asked about the Northern Pass at Saturday’s debate and gave it his seal of approval.

Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker was widely mocked after briefly entertaining the idea of building a fence on the Canadian border last summer; he dropped out soon after. To the extent that Canada has played a determinative role in the New Hampshire primary, the concern has been what’s leaving the United States, not what’s coming in. Opposition to the North American Free Trade Agreement, and the subsequent loss of lumber jobs to Canada, helped propel Republican Pat Buchanan to victory in 1996. (Some Buchanan supporters did believe Russian tanks would invade the United States by way of Canada.)

When I asked Cal DelaHaye, who was working on a piece of funnel cake at Grampy’s diner in Pittsburg, if he thought more candidates should make the trek up north, he was emphatic. “No,” he said. “I’d tell them they’re wasting their time.”

There was one group of New Hampshire Republicans that was particularly concerned about the Canadian border threat. In 2006 and 2007, the New Hampshire branch of the Minutemen Civil Defense League made a few weekend trips to West Derby, Vermont, and Pittsburg, to draw attention to the great northern threat.

“One time we saw a guy who actually parked his car in the New Hampshire side and then backpacked, and it looked like he was hiking the Long Trail, and he headed north toward Canada, and we looked at his car later and it turned out he was from Canada,” said Ron Oplinus of Exeter, New Hampshire, who lead the chapter before it disbanded a few years back. “So we don’t know exactly what was going on but we didn’t see him again.”

Other than that, he conceded, “there wasn’t much” to see.

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The One Line in New Hampshire That Donald Trump Won’t Cross

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Learn How to Wash Your Face with Food

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Learn How to Wash Your Face with Food

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Climate change has found another way to screw the poor

mo’ warming, mo’ problems

Climate change has found another way to screw the poor

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Standard & Poor’s (S&P) Ratings Services has found yet another way that fossil fuel burning by rich countries is going to screw over poor ones — by making it harder for them to borrow money.

S&P analysts identified climate change as one of two “global mega-trends” that will shape countries’ economic risks in the years to come (aging populations is the other trend). In a new report, the analysts said climate change would hurt nations’ creditworthiness, with poor countries the worst affected.

The American financial services company considered how vulnerable 116 countries are to sea-level rise, assessed the role of agriculture in each of their economies, and factored in the results of a climate vulnerability index produced by Notre Dame University. The analysts found that the credit ratings of Vietnam, Bangladesh, Senegal, Mozambique, Fiji, the Philippines, Nigeria, Cameroon, Papua New Guinea, and Indonesia were the most vulnerable to the worsening whims of the weather. Not exactly a group of G7 candidates. Bloomberg reports:

Global warming “will put downward pressure on sovereign ratings during the remainder of this century,” S&P analysts led by Moritz Kraemer in Frankfurt wrote. “The degree to which individual countries and societies are going to be affected by warming and changing weather patterns depends largely on actions undertaken by other, often far-away societies.” …

Changing rainfall patterns could affect agricultural yields, and altered weather could spread disease and pests, hitting productivity, they said. …

“Unlike in the case of aging, individual societies cannot by themselves meaningfully reduce the impact they will feel as the climate changes,” the analysts said. “A society may choose to reduce its carbon emissions unilaterally to reduce the risk of the potential consequences of global warming, but due to the global character most of the benefits of that society’s sacrifice will accrue to other nations.”

Affected countries might want to shake a tin can in the direction of Europe. The nations whose economies were deemed least vulnerable to climate change were Luxembourg, Switzerland, and Austria.


Source
Climate Change to Hit Sovereign Creditworthiness: S&P, Bloomberg

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Climate change has found another way to screw the poor

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Obama wants to spend $1 billion on climate adaptation

Obama wants to spend $1 billion on climate adaptation

White House

Two farmers show their very parched farm to President Obama and California Gov. Jerry Brown.

OK, we get it: The climate deniers in Congress don’t want the country to do anything to rein in greenhouse gas pollution from their favorite filthy industries.

But are they willing, at the very least, to help Americans adapt as the weather turns deadly around them? We will soon know the answer to that question.

President Barack Obama visited California’s Central Valley farming region on Friday to announce disaster relief for the droughtravaged state. And, while he was there, he announced his vision for $1 billion in climate-adaptation spending.

It’s not clear whether the drought afflicting more than 90 percent of California can be directly blamed on climate change — shifting conditions in the Pacific Ocean and other natural fluctuations may also be responsible. But we do know that droughts like this will continue to occur more frequently as greenhouse gases build up in the atmosphere. Climate models warn that California will continue to get drier, with the mountain snowpacks that are relied on for year-round water supplies expected to dwindle.

The short-term disaster aid pledged by Obama on Friday included $100 million to help Californian farmers cope with livestock losses, $60 million plus meal assistance for affected Californian families, and $15 million to help farmers in California, Texas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, Colorado, and New Mexico squeeze more out of every gallon of water.

In the longer term, Obama announced that he wants to establish a “climate resilience fund.” The Washington Post outlines what that means:

Cities across the country are formulating and, in some cases, enacting their own plans to protect against rising water, increased temperatures and more frequent severe weather. …

Obama would spend the $1 billion to “better understand the projected impacts of climate change,” encourage local action to reduce future risk, and fund technology and infrastructure that will be more resilient to climate change, according to briefing documents released by the White House.

Paul Bledsoe, senior fellow on energy and society at the German Marshall Fund of the United States, said that Democrats and Republicans in Congress “don’t have to agree” on whether the combustion of fossil fuels is causing climate change.

“We just need to agree we have a problem that must be dealt with,” said Bledsoe, who was an Interior Department official under President Bill Clinton.

The climate resilience fund will be part of Obama’s 2015 budget, to be released next month. Don’t expect Republicans in Congress to be too enthusiastic.


Source
Fact Sheet: President Obama Leading Administration-wide Drought Response, White House
Obama to propose $1 billion to prepare for climate change, The Washington Post

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Obama wants to spend $1 billion on climate adaptation

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Huge pipeline accidents cause spills, kill dozens in China

Huge pipeline accidents cause spills, kill dozens in China

Aaron Choi

This is what Qingdao normally looks like.

Pipeline accidents in China during the past week have killed more than 50 people, led to the arrests of nine officials, caused two large oil spills, and triggered evacuations. Both of the ruptured pipelines were owned by China’s largest oil refiner, China Petroleum, also known as Sinopec. Here are the basics:

Leak and explosion on Friday

A pipeline ruptured in the eastern port city of Qingdao, causing crude to gush into streets and into the sea. Several hours later, with cleanup underway, the crude exploded, igniting a street filled with shops and apartments. The latest confirmed death toll is 55 people, with nine still missing and 136 reported injured. Oil dispersants are being sprayed over an oil spill stretching from Jiaozhou Bay into the Yellow Sea. The government blamed human error. On Tuesday, the AP reported that seven company officials and two Qingdao city employees were in custody.

Leak on Tuesday

On the other side of the country, in Anshun City in the southwestern Guizhou province, a crane toppled over on Tuesday at a high-speed railway construction site, splitting open a pipeline used to transport gasoline. Residents within a mile of the accident were evacuated and the Press Trust of India is reporting that an estimated 2,200 tons of gasoline has spilled. A team of 110 people is working to repair the pipe and mop up the toxic fuel.

WTF is going on?

A fossil-fueled energy boom feeding China’s economic growth is what’s going on.

“The ever-growing refining capacity and oil infrastructure in China had certainly seen a rising number of incidents,” Andrey Kryuchenkov, an analyst at VTB Capital in London, told Bloomberg. “The Sinopec pipeline explosion will surely see a prolonged investigation and a safety review.”


Source
9 Detained After Oil Pipeline Blasts in China, AP
Residents Evacuated After Sinopec Oil Leak in Guizhou: Xinhua, Bloomberg

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Huge pipeline accidents cause spills, kill dozens in China

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If You’re On Trial, You’d Better Hope Goldman Sachs is on Your Side

Mother Jones

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In the case of former Goldman Sachs trader Fabrice Tourre, the U.S. government was able to secure only a weak civil judgment. But in the case of former Goldman Sachs programmer Sergei Aleynikov, the U.S. government succeeded in winning a sentence of eight years in prison even though their case was so weak it was overturned almost immediately on appeal. What was the difference? After reading Michael Lewis’ Vanity Fair piece on Aleynikov, Felix Salmon explains:

The big difference between the two cases is that while Tourre was defended by Goldman Sachs, Aleynikov was prosecuted by them: Lewis leaves the reader in no doubt that the decision to prosecute, along with all the supporting arguments, while nominally taken by the FBI, was essentially made by Goldman Sachs itself. The irony is painful: the government, acting against Goldman Sachs, could only manage a civil prosecution. But Goldman Sachs, acting through the government, managed to secure itself a highly-dubious criminal prosecution, complete with an eight-year prison sentence.

Lewis doesn’t delve too deeply into the jurisprudence here. But it’s obvious that the case would never have been brought without Goldman’s aggressive attempt to cause as much personal destruction as possible to Aleynikov.

Emphasis mine. Aleynikov is not 100 percent innocent in this case. He’s close, though. And even now, after his sentence has been overturned, Goldman Sachs has managed to continue its persecution of Aleynikov by getting the Manhattan D.A.’s office to arrest him on some brand new charges, for no apparent reason except to make sure the guy has a criminal record. (He’s already served enough time that he wouldn’t return to prison even if he were convicted.)

So there you have it. In a nutshell, these two cases tell you who really runs things here in the land of the free. Both Lewis’s article and Salmon’s summary are well worth a few minutes of your time.

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If You’re On Trial, You’d Better Hope Goldman Sachs is on Your Side

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Could Photosynthesis Be Our Best Defense Against Climate Change?

Mother Jones

This story first appeared in Slate and is reproduced here as part of the Climate Desk collaboration.

A gigantic, steaming-hot mound of compost is not the first place most people would search for a solution to climate change, but the hour is getting very late. “The world experienced unprecedented high-impact climate extremes during the 2001-2010 decade,” declares a new report from the United Nations’ World Meteorological Organization, which added that the decade was “the warmest since the start of modern measurements in 1850.” Among those extreme events: the European heat wave of 2003, which in a mere six weeks caused 71,449 excess deaths, according to a study sponsored by the European Union. In the United States alone, 2012 brought the hottest summer on record, the worst drought in 50 years and Hurricane Sandy. Besides the loss of life, climate-related disasters cost the United States some $140 billion in 2012, a study by the Natural Resources Defense Council concluded.

We can expect to see more climate-related catastrophes soon. In May scientists announced that carbon dioxide had reached 400 parts per million in the atmosphere. Meanwhile, humanity is raising the level by about 2 parts per million a year by burning fossil fuels, cutting down forests, and other activities.

At the moment, climate policy focuses overwhelmingly on the 2 ppm part of the problem while ignoring the 400 ppm part. Thus in his landmark climate speech on June 25, President Obama touted his administration’s doubling of fuel efficiency standards for vehicles as a major advance in the fight to preserve a livable planet for our children. In Europe, Germany and Denmark are leaving coal behind in favor of generating electricity with wind and solar. But such mitigation measures aim only to limit new emissions of greenhouse gases.

That is no longer sufficient. The 2 ppm of annual emissions being targeted by conventional mitigation efforts are not what are causing the “unprecedented” number of extreme climate events. The bigger culprit by far are the 400 ppm of carbon dioxide that are already in the atmosphere. As long as those 400 ppm remain in place, the planet will keep warming and unleashing more extreme climate events. Even if we slashed annual emissions to zero overnight, the physical inertia of the climate system would keep global temperatures rising for 30 more years.

We need a new paradigm: If humanity is to avoid a future in which the deadly heat waves, floods, and droughts of recent years become normal, we must lower the existing level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. To be sure, reducing additional annual emissions and adapting to climate change must remain vital priorities, but the extraction of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere has now become an urgent necessity.

Under this new paradigm, one of the most promising means of extracting atmospheric carbon dioxide is also one of the most common processes on Earth: photosynthesis.

Which is how I came to find myself plunged forearm-deep into the aforementioned mound of compost. It was a truly massive heap, nearly the length of a football field, 5 feet tall and 10 feet wide, and a second equally large pile lay nearby. It all belonged to Cornell University, one of the powerhouses of agricultural research in the United States. Michael P. Hoffmann, the associate dean of Cornell’s College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, told me it was comprised mainly of food scraps from Cornell’s dining halls and detritus from its groundskeeping operations.

“You don’t want to leave your hand in there too long,” Hoffmann cautioned as I felt around inside the steaming mass of brown. Sure enough, although it was a cool, cloudy day, my forearm soon felt almost uncomfortably warm. “The microbes in there generate a fair amount of heat as they break down the organic materials,” he explained.

Compost is but one of the materials that can be used to produce biochar, a substance that a small but growing number of scientists and private companies believe could enable extraction of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere at a meaningful scale. Biochar, which is basically a fancy scientific name for charcoal, is produced when plant matter—tree leaves, branches and roots, cornstalks, rice husks, peanut shells—or other organic material is heated in a low-oxygen environment (so it doesn’t catch fire). Like compost, all of these materials contain carbon: The plants inhaled it, as carbon dioxide, in the process of photosynthesis. Inserting biochar in soil therefore has the effect of removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and storing it underground, where it will not contribute to global warming for hundreds of years.

Johannes Lehmann, a professor of agricultural science at Cornell, is one of the world’s foremost experts on biochar. He has calculated that if biochar were added to 10 percent of global cropland, it would store 29 billion tons of carbon dioxide equivalent—an amount roughly equal to humanity’s annual greenhouse gas emissions. This approach would take advantage of a physical reality often overlooked in climate policy discussions: the capacity of the Earth’s plants and soils to serve as a climate “sink,” absorbing carbon that otherwise would be released into the atmosphere and accelerate global warming. Oceans have been the most important sink to date, but their absorption of CO2 is acidifying the sea—threatening the marine food chain—and raising water temperatures, which is causing sea levels to rise (because warm water expands). Meanwhile, the Earth’s plants and soils already hold three times as much carbon as the atmosphere does, and scientists believe that they could hold a great deal more without upsetting the balance of natural systems.

Using photosynthesis and agriculture to extract carbon should not be confused with other methods that sound similar, such as “carbon capture and sequestration.” CCS, as experts call it, is a technology that would capture carbon dioxide released when a power plant burned coal (or, in theory, other fossil fuels) to generate electricity. A filter would collect the CO2 before it exited the smokestack; the CO2 would then be transformed into a solid and stored underground. CCS assumes that coal burning would continue; the CCS technology would simply cancel out most of the CO2 emissions this coal burning would produce—and that’s assuming the technology will actually work. So far, no nation on Earth has managed to operate a commercially viable CCS plant, despite an estimated $25 billion in subsidies.

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Could Photosynthesis Be Our Best Defense Against Climate Change?

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Fracking industry cleanup workers exposed to benzene in Colorado, feds allege

Fracking industry cleanup workers exposed to benzene in Colorado, feds allege

judylcrook

Parachute Creek

We told you about the drawn-out spill of 241 barrels of natural gas liquids earlier this year at a Williams Energy plant that handles fracked gas in Colorado. It turns out that Parachute Creek and its wildlife weren’t the only things exposed to cancer-causing benzene because of the accident.

The toxic contents of the mess were kept secret from workers sent to excavate it, and the workers were not kitted out with the proper safety equipment.

That’s according to the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, which fined a Williams Energy subsidiary and two other companies a total of $27,000 this week for what it described as “serious violations” related to the cleanup work. From The Denver Post:

As workers began digging for super-concentrated hydrocarbons, the companies “did not inform (them) of the nature, level and degree of exposure likely as a result of participation in such hazardous waste operations,” OSHA documents said.

Workers dug trenches along the pipeline, west of Parachute Creek, to find and remove toxic material, documents said. “This condition potentially exposed employees to benzene and other volatile organic compounds.”

The Glenwood Springs Post Independent has more details, including news of an apparent two-month coverup by Williams Energy. The newspaper reports that the company knew about the leak in January, but failed to report it to the state until March:

The leak is attributed to a blown pressure valve on a pipeline leading from a nearby Williams natural-gas processing plant. Williams officials at the time maintained that the amounts of spilled fluids was not enough to warrant being reporting to the Colorado Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (COGCC), the state’s oversight agency concerning oil and gas drilling activities.

But by March, the amount of spilled natural gas liquids had expanded and ultimately was estimated to amount to 10,000 gallons of hydrocarbons contaminating nearby soil, groundwater and — in small amounts — the waters of Parachute Creek itself.

In early April, four workers complained to the Post Independent that they had been working at the plume site for Badger Daylighting, a contractor hired for the cleanup, without the proper protective gear and breathing apparatus.

Tell us again what’s so great about this fracking boom?

John Upton is a science fan and green news boffin who tweets, posts articles to Facebook, and blogs about ecology. He welcomes reader questions, tips, and incoherent rants: johnupton@gmail.com.

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Fracking industry cleanup workers exposed to benzene in Colorado, feds allege

Posted in alo, Anchor, Dolphin, FF, G & F, GE, LG, ONA, organic, solar, solar power, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , | Comments Off on Fracking industry cleanup workers exposed to benzene in Colorado, feds allege